Seeing

** Books mentioned have Amazon affiliate links, meaning I make a few cents if you purchase through my link. I only recommend books that I’ve read.

Learning to draw can teach us how to learn to see. Years ago, an acquaintance recommended that I take a drawing class to help me with my photography. I followed through and took a class based on the book – Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain by Betty Edwards. I learned two important things in that class.

1. Anyone can learn to draw decently. All you have to do is learn to see what’s right in front of you, not the image in your head. The exercises in the book show you how to do just this.

Drawing can teach us to see: to notice properly rather than gaze absentmindedly. In the process of recreating with our own hand what lies before our eyes, we naturally move from a position of observing beauty in a loose way to one where we acquire a deep understanding of its parts.” ~ The Philosopher’s Mail

2. I discovered Frederick Franck (Zen Seeing, Zen Drawing), a draw-er and sculptor, who became one of my mentors for seeing and life.

“Firstly, we’re likely to be so busy taking the pictures, we forget to look at the world whose beauty and interest prompted us to take a photograph in the first place. And secondly, because we feel the pictures are safely stored on our phones, we never get around to looking at them, so sure are we that we’ll get around to it one day.” ~ The Philosopher’s Mail

Frederick Franck agreed with the quote above – specifically, that photography can get in the way of actually seeing what’s there. Drawing is naturally a slow process, inviting us to observe closely. We often forget to do this in photography. However, I believe that the practice of contemplative photography can help us to see what’s really there – just like drawing does. Through careful observation and exploring multiple perspectives, we can come to a deeper understanding of the parts and the whole.

The camera is an instrument that teaches people to see without a camera. ~ Dorothea Lange

Does the camera get in the way of your seeing? I’d love to hear your thoughts on this.

Note: This post was inspired by an article in The Philosopher’s Mail – Why you should stop taking pictures on your phone – and learn to draw.

Further Reading

* Photography, Drawing, and Seeing

* Patricia Turner guides us in looking at and sketching the landscape before photographing in this wonderful (and free) e-book, A Field Guide for the Contemplative Photographer.

* Who is Frederick Franck?

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